On the limit to the accuracy of regional-scale air quality models

被引:11
|
作者
Rao, S. Trivikrama [1 ,2 ]
Luo, Huiying [2 ]
Astitha, Marina [2 ]
Hogrefe, Christian [3 ]
Garcia, Valerie [3 ]
Mathur, Rohit [3 ]
机构
[1] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Marine Earth & Atmospher Sci, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
[2] Univ Connecticut, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Storrs, CT 06269 USA
[3] US EPA, Ctr Environm Measurement & Modeling, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27711 USA
关键词
DYNAMIC EVALUATION; TIME-SERIES; TRANSPORT MODELS; CHEMISTRY MODELS; UNITED-STATES; NORTH-AMERICA; AMS WORKSHOP; WOODS-HOLE; OZONE; PERFORMANCE;
D O I
10.5194/acp-20-1627-2020
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Regional-scale air pollution models are routinely being used worldwide for research, forecasting air quality, and regulatory purposes. It is well recognized that there are both reducible (systematic) and irreducible (unsystematic) errors in the meteorology-atmospheric-chemistry modeling systems. The inherent (random) uncertainty stems from our inability to properly characterize stochastic variations in atmospheric dynamics and chemistry and from the incommensurability associated with comparisons of the volume-averaged model estimates with point measurements. Because stochastic variations are not being explicitly simulated in the current generation of regional-scale meteorology-air quality models, one should expect to find differences between the model estimates and corresponding observations. This paper presents an observation-based methodology to determine the expected errors from current-generation regional air quality models even when the model design, physics, chemistry, and numerical analysis, as well as its input data, were "perfect". To this end, the short-term synoptic-scale fluctuations embedded in the daily maximum 8 h ozone time series are separated from the longer-term forcing using a simple recursive moving average filter. The inherent uncertainty attributable to the stochastic nature of the atmosphere is determined based on 30+ years of historical ozone time series data measured at various monitoring sites in the contiguous United States (CONUS). The results reveal that the expected root mean square error (RMSE) at the median and 95th percentile is about 2 and 5 ppb, respectively, even for perfect air quality models driven with perfect input data. Quantitative estimation of the limit to the model's accuracy will help in objectively assessing the current state of the science in regional air pollution models, measuring progress in their evolution, and providing meaningful and firm targets for improvements in their accuracy relative to ambient measurements.
引用
收藏
页码:1627 / 1639
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Connecting regional-scale tree distribution models with seed dispersal kernels
    Neupane, Ram C.
    Powell, James A.
    Edwards, Thomas C.
    APPLIED MATHEMATICS AND COMPUTATION, 2022, 412
  • [32] Technical note: AQMEII4 Activity 1: evaluation of wet and dry deposition schemes as an integral part of regional-scale air quality models
    Galmarini, Stefano
    Makar, Paul
    Clifton, Olivia E.
    Hogrefe, Christian
    Bash, Jesse O.
    Bellasio, Roberto
    Bianconi, Roberto
    Bieser, Johannes
    Butler, Tim
    Ducker, Jason
    Flemming, Johannes
    Hodzic, Alma
    Holmes, Christopher D.
    Kioutsioukis, Ioannis
    Kranenburg, Richard
    Lupascu, Aurelia
    Perez-Camanyo, Juan Luis
    Pleim, Jonathan
    Ryu, Young-Hee
    San Jose, Roberto
    Schwede, Donna
    Silva, Sam
    Wolke, Ralf
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2021, 21 (20) : 15663 - 15697
  • [33] Regional-scale co-seismic landslide assessment using limit equilibrium analysis
    Saade, Angela
    Abou-Jaoude, Grace
    Wartman, Joseph
    ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 2016, 204 : 53 - 64
  • [34] Surrogate models to compute optimal air quality planning policies at a regional scale
    Carnevale, Claudio
    Finzi, Giovanna
    Guariso, Giorgio
    Pisoni, Enrico
    Volta, Marialuisa
    ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING & SOFTWARE, 2012, 34 : 44 - 50
  • [35] On the application of meteorological models and lidar techniques for air quality studies at a regional scale
    Soriano, C
    Baldasano, JM
    Buttler, WT
    AIR POLLUTION MODELING AND ITS APPLICATION XII, 1998, 22 : 591 - 600
  • [36] Regional-scale air pollution source identification using backward particle dynamics
    Filippova, Mariia
    Bakhteev, Oleg
    Meshchaninov, Fedor
    Burnaev, Evgeny
    Vanovskiy, Vladimir
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2025, 345
  • [37] Simulating smoke transport from wildland fires with a regional-scale air quality model: Sensitivity to uncertain wind fields
    Garcia-Menendez, Fernando
    Hu, Yongtao
    Odman, Mehmet Talat
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2013, 118 (12) : 6493 - 6504
  • [38] REGIONAL-SCALE AIR-QUALITY EFFECTS OF COAL-BASED ENERGY DEVELOPMENT IN THE SOUTHWESTERN UNITED-STATES
    BASS, A
    SCIRE, JS
    BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1980, 61 (11) : 1497 - 1497
  • [39] PRACTICAL REGIONAL-SCALE AIR-QUALITY SIMULATION-MODEL FOR ENERGY RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT IN 4 CORNERS AREA
    BASS, A
    BENKLEY, CW
    BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1978, 59 (09) : 1245 - 1246
  • [40] Pollen dispersion and pollen deposition modelling in micro-scale and regional-scale numerical models
    Pospisil, Jiri
    Jicha, Miroslav
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENT AND POLLUTION, 2012, 50 (1-4) : 431 - 440